Page 38: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (July 1981)

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34th Annual Statistical

Analysis Released By

Marine Index Bureau

The Marine Index Bureau, New

York, the commercial depository for data concerning personnel illnesses and injuries for the

American merchant marine and affiliated industries, released its 34th annual statistical analysis recently. The analysis covers ill- nesses and injuries reported to the Bureau for deepsea seafarers during the calendar year 1980.

In announcing the analysis,

Bruno J. Augenti, chairman of the board of the Marine Index

Bureau, said: "According to the monthly U.S. Department of Com- merce Merchant Marine Data

Sheets, average employment for the year 1980 in the deepsea in- dustry reached a new low of 19,720 jobs. In September 1945 (WW II), the number was 168,000 and in December 1951 (Korean

War), it was 93,163." He further stated that "Deepsea personnel in the 40 years and over age group accounted for 3,444 of the total 5,992 illnesses reported and for 3,914 of the total 7,446 in- injuries. "In all but four of the illness categories, seafarers over 40 suf- fered a markedly high number of diseases. Injuries for the over-40

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Telephone: (804) 874 4488. Telex: 82-3653 (NAVIDYNE NPNS). 4 age group were higher in all cat- egories except one (back frac- ture). This does not mean that older seafarers suffer more ill- nesses and injuries than do their younger shipmates, but it does confirm that seafarers over 40 continued to constitute a major part of the seagoing population."

Mr. Augenti also pointed out that . . . "over the 10-year period 1971 through 1980, the incidence rate of illness and injury com- bined fluctuated within narrow limits and appears to be stabil- izing. The combined rate for 1980 was 68.1, lower by 3.7 points than the 1979 rate."

For a copy of the full analysis—

Circular Letter No. 98—write to

Capt. Robert E. Hart, President,

Marine Index Bureau, 17 Battery

Place, New York, N.Y. 10004.

Underway Replenishment

Machinery Topic At

Long Beach/LA ASNE

The Long Beach/Greater Los

Angeles Section of the American

Society of Naval Engineers held a recent regular meeting at the officers club of the Los Alamitos

Armed Forces Reserve Center.

Capt. J.A. Gildea, USN, Section chairman, welcomed those pres- ent and recounted several of the more meaningful meetings held during the past year, and brought the members up to date with a status report on the vital statis- tics of the Section.

Captain Gildea then turned the meeting over to program chair- man Carl E. Erickson, who intro- duced the topic for the evening and the two presenters: "New

Overhaul Techniques for Unique

Naval Deck Machinery," by Lon

L. Denison, UNREP overhaul co- ordinator, Naval Weapon Sys- tem Engineering Station, Port

Hueneme, Calif.; and Arthur F.

Green, supervisory production controller, Long Beach Naval

Shipyard, Long Beach, Calif.

The speakers described the uniqueness of Underway Replen- ishment (UNREP) machinery and pointed out that unlike con- ventional deck machinery that is a product line of various manu- facturers, UNREP machinery is specifically designed for the par- ticular application. Thus each procurement for new or converted ships over the past 20 years has resulted in different designs.

The developing of overhaul techniques for the 34 unique

UNREP winch designs has pre- sented a technical challenge re- quiring unusually close coopera- tion between the fleet, the winch component manufacturer, the

Navy's in-service engineers, and the Naval Winch Rework Facility.

The coordination of this activity requires intimate knowledge of not only the machinery and its environment, but also the func- tions and mission assigned to each.

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